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Chicago examiner in every walk of life every vocation everybody looks to the examiner for ms ' wants buyers sellers and trader realize that the want ad pages are the market place of Chicago â– ol ix no l!2 a m * monday Chicago may 1 1911 18 p^ges monday registered in 17 & patent office price one cent Â»Â« b^jts trxtt " - x ' cuira.-n akin imimlvv h n>4 yv^x^'sn chicawo arvd vjcinvty â€” rain and l.'j nuch cc'ftr me.tday with northerly jfefihi Â° o^les tuesday cloudy and ccol r$*lw aaowtst 50 s&^j average 58 bangor me fire unknown martial law declared citixens flee loss 6,000,000 flames wipe out business district leap river and spread to residences dy namite fails to check them homeless refugees are en dangered by falling bridges and swamped ferryboat public buildings burned b-fcngor me april 30 fire starting a broad street near union close by tie junction of the penobscot river and she kenduskeag stream which divides the city rwfept northward fanned by a stiff southerly bree.se wiping out practically all the business district and public build â– lngsl and at a late hour to-night was cat ling up the best residential district on the h northern side ; : i lat midnight the loss was estimated at â– 6,000,000 -; i martial law has been proclaimed by â– mayor mullen buildings m the path of â– the are are being razed by dynamite m â– the hope of checking its progress â– the efforts of the fire department from â– the time the fire started have been ab â– solutcly futile the flames swept north uiong broad then jumped the kenduskeag â– Â„ ream running along on the western bank suloug icxchtinge street si la mes leap across river Â£ i slaying about 4 o'clock ln the afternoon â– , i7u hour the fire had leaped beyond all l ii7i,i ihe smith and strickland blocks â– --' the junction of hammond and central bui reels unci the kenduskeag stream were bdynxuilti.'d late m the afternoon m a vain attempt to keep the sanies from leaping the bstream i i after thp first rush of the fire to tha â– north the back wind set up by the fire itself fanned the flames toward the south â– threatening that part of the city that at first seemed safe b early m the advance of the flames the â– postoffice on a sort of promontory be tween branches of the kenduskeag stream bfeil before the onslaught of the flames 7 i before 5 o'clock the maine central rall â– rc&d was obliged to vacate its depot the â– nrtieating office force and crews seeing th building engulfed almost before they b were out ef danger i at he start sll communication except by â– the postal telegraph company was ent off me western union and the telephone of flcc went early when the city was shut off from tele â– phonic communication hy the burning of â– the central office of the new england â– telephone & telegraph company calls â– tor aid from portland lewiston and au â– gusta were sent out by the wire chief of â– the company who climbed a pole and cut 111 Â« a trunk line â– 3ke slrl operators stuck to the exchange â– until the flames were coming ln their wln â– dows notifying families along the expect i ed route of the fire to drag out all the â– furniture they could and escape i for a long time uie city hall at thc foot of thain street was saved by a slight shift m he wind the haices-chalmers block hthe hodgkins block the fiske building btke i auks &. 00 plant the morse 011 hstr block the offices of the bangor and aroostook railroad the oflice of the ban x get mews the windsor hotel and the pub hafc library were destroyed with many other vu prominent buildings bk'lilitia is on guard hln the residential district the people bsiarled to move ou'i early m the evening i fighting for conveyances on which to t>ile i their eflccts the people were panic i stricken running wildly carrying all i sorts of useless articles snatched up ln â– tbeir frenzy they poured out of the city toward old town t_e escape to brewer across the penob scot was cut off early by the burning of he bridges the ferry was nearly swamped carrying across crowds that waited too long to escape through the â– streets and were cut off by the rapid ad vance of the flames a mon named scrlbner of brewer was immed under the falling walls of the morse oliver building and it is reported that several other persons have perished shortly after 9 o'clock help from neigh boring cities began to arrive and now all j this apparatus is m play the city is m darkness all sources of light having been out off and the greatest confusion prevails the entire population being m the streets already lt is difficult to obtain food many restaurants being liasati together with one large and sev tft small hotels the are is visible for twenty-flve miles around and thousands of people are swarming m from surrounding towns the militip has been called out to aid the po , lice m preserving order m f florence schenck wilson florence schenck to prosecute vanderbilt manager as bigamist penniless woman is 111 in paris from shock of news of wilson's marriage paris april 30 there is a blond lit tle american girl ill and penulliess ln a garret of an obscure hotel m paris who declared to-day to the examiner corres pondent that she is the wife of charles wilson known on two continents as the manager of alfred vanderbilt's show horses a few months ago wilson married a boston heiress at that time the pros pective father-in-law objected to wilson on on the ground of his acquaintance with i certain florence schenck here is the legal record transcribed at somerset house of that acquaintance at the registry office paddington lon don eighth of may 1908 charles henry wilson aged forty-five divorced husband of elizabeth aiuge wilson was married to florence rosser schenck aged twenty-one daughter of dr powhattan schenck sur geon of virginia u 8 a the witnesses were a d procco personal friend of al fred vanderbilt and valeska surratt this afternoon florence schenck said there had been no divorce and that her husband had been ln constant commnnlca tlon with her tip to within a few weeks to what she claims his bigamous marriage ln boston he wrote loving letters promising to return saying that sbe was his only happiness 1 am not divorced from charles wil son she declared he has never even talked of divorce m any of his letters he spoke only of coming back to me he wrote again and again that he could only flnd happiness with me then came this awful thing his so-called marriage to that poor woman he must have been m des perate need of money to run such an aw ful risk of prison â€¢ i shall surely prose cute the shock made me very ill i am alone here and without money and to think he was the man who took me away from home miss schenck or mrs wilson wept over come by physical weakness but persisted m saying i shall go to london as soon as possi ble and swear out a warrant against my husband charging bigamy charles wil son is now ln london managing the coach ing season for alfred vanderhllt a.c wadsworth dies at 78 fathin-ln-law of ex-governor yates prominent in politics springfield lu april so archibald clark wadsworth son of general elijah wndsworth who was on washington's staff and father-in-law of former governor richard tates died to-day at the yates home he was seventy-eight years old and had been a resident of Illinois for seventy years he was prominent m the early polit ical history of the state and for sixteen years was a trustee of the institution for the blind at jacksonville at the time of his death he was president of the board of trustees of the Illinois woman's college the remains will be taken to jacksonville tuesday for burial gibbons against revision commandments must not be changed says cardinal bai/timoiie md april 30.--cardlnnl gibbons to-day expressed his disapproval of the proposal ef episcopalian ministers to shorten the en commandments the cnrdlnal's displeasure was expressed while addressing onfi.__._nts in the im j maculnte conception catholic church to \ day the cardinal said what a horrl-i ble thing to undertake to lay bands on god's commandments we must not dare to change ie iota of od'g word i stock plunger dies dishwasher in cafe old brokers receipts show toiler was michael heitler once a rich grocer wealth lost then nerve â€¢ former friends identify body of man who dropped life less at humble work ten-year old receipts m the pockets of a dishwasher who dropped dead m the lambs cafe saturday night disclosed the fact yesterday that the man was michael heitler formerly a wealthy grocer and produce dealer according to the police his death dis closes another instance where a man who had accumulated wealth tried to buck the market and lost and then lost his nerve nearly a week ago the man applied for a job as dishwasher at the lambs cafe and had been at work only tbree days when be suddeuly toppled over smiley coiibett one of the proprietors of the cafe did not know who be was and none of the employes knew him by any other name than mike he was quiet and reserved and some of the employes bad a lurking feeling tbat he bad known bet ter days his body was removed to the western casket company's establishment and lien tenant edward conroy of central detail assigned detectives sullivan and lennon to investigate in one of his inner pockets lay the mute evidence faded and torn the re ceipts showed that michael heitler had paid large sums of money to brokerage firms and that all he had to show for lt was the receipts ri_en the defectives found some who had known him m his days of prosperity they told the story of how he lost ms money nnd after losing it gradually went down ln the scale of life he ls declared to have two married daughters living ln rogers park and to be related to otber wealthy families m Chicago none of them could be located yesterday ,- bars suffragist smokers mrs belmont angered by report plans garden lunchroom new york april 30 mrs o h p belmont is indignant at a report that she intends to have a smoking room ln her new suffrage quarters mrs ida hosted harper who ls associated with mrs bel mont opposes it Â» what she wants to do ln her new house which by the way is to be the headquarters for the political equality association of which she ls founder is to have a lunch room where delicious luncheons may be served for 25 cents as there are as many men who patronize such lunch rooms as women mrs bel mont's idea is to have lt an out of tfbor or garden lunch where men may smoke if they wish to do so sneezes arm out of joint workman dislocates shoulder when dust gets up his nose a sneeze dislocated the right shoulder of thomas coston 1114 xorth clark street coston works for butler brothers west randolph street and the river and was dusting iv the company's offices some of the dust went up his nostrils and he sneezed he felt a stinging pain and was unable to use his right arm the po lice took him to the practitioners hos pital and later to his home mexican rebels kill u s millionaire servant and two mexicans also slain after insurrectos hold up train hope of peace wanes armistice is signed but fight ing continues foreigners m country m alarm sstclal cabin to the examiner mexico city april 30 pehr olsson seller millionaire former professor m the university of california and the most dls tiguished foreign private resident m mexi co was killed by rebels at 3 o'clock yes terday afternoon near cuernavaca seventy miles from this city three others a mexi can foreman a mexican ranchman and a japanese servant of softer were also killed the rebels flagged a train five miles this side of cuernavaca and robbed the passen gers at the point of rifles the trainmen started back to flag a freight train bearing down from behind but the rebels refused to let them pass softer protested that a wreck would mean a catastrophe with a heavy loss of life and he had no sooner said the words than he was shot down when sorter's japanese servant tried to protect him he was shot also the two mexicans were killed when the rebels fired on the train the engineer of the approaching freight train saw the train ahead just m time to stop and avoid a wreck russian minister protests a widow nnd oue child survive softer he was a native of finland but a swed ish subject russian minister stalowski cabled a strong presentation of the case to soffer's government this evening all communication with the city from the north nnd south of the cuernavaca division has been cut off by the rebels peace seems more remote than ever pres ident dias will not resign according to statements 1 government officials senor carabnjal the peace envoy is still held at saltillo on orders of diaz tho foreigners m the american span ish german und unglieh colonies are pre paring to defend themselves against an other frehch commune the japanese alone show no signs cf alarm the amer ican residents at saltillo have wired their embassy in this city asking permission to organize v military company for their own defense fighting is going on this afternoon in the streets of toricon accordng to dis patches received to-day before telegraphic communication was cut off armistice is signed the armistice was signed this morning by the government and senor figueroa rep resenting tlie rebels m the states of guer rero and morelos margarita neri the girl leader of 000 rebels ln guerrero refuses to abide by the armistice and declares she will fight to the bitter end the war department denies the armis tice was signed to-day but from a source of information absolutely reliable it is known that it was signed before noon to day a petition bearing 1,000 signatures de manding his immediate resignation was presented to-day to president diaz a demonstration hostile to the government has been planned by students to take place here may 15 twenty-two large towns in southern mexico arc iv full control of the rebels thc soo troops sent from this city to the garrison at cuernavaca on friday last have disappeared and a courier reports that they were attacked by the euel&siad the eutlre force either killed or captured 1,000,000 in securities found in hut woman owner sent to asylum miss williams enigma of wall street refuses to collect money due bonda lie on floor nbw tobk april 30 â€” in a dilapidated shanty at 452 prospect avenne brooklyn agents of the state lunacy commission to-day fonnd stocks bonds and mortgages valued at nearly a million dollars scat tered about like so much waste paper the wealth belongs tc miss janes per kins williams the woman enigma of wall street who since 1875 has been a daring but wise speculator in stocks miss williams now m her seventy fifth year has been removed to the long island state hospital for the insane for observa tion friends caused her removal to the institution a special agent of the lunacy commis sion is on guard at the rickety shanty where the woman had lived for twenty years m squalor eirbblsh and old bot tles heaped the floors and she cooked what little food she ate on a score that was almost falling to pieces every day she went to wall street and visited brokers banks and business houses her bankers are henry clews & co in the shanty were found great heaps of letters most of which had never been opened many of these contained evidence of her large investments denies mars is inhabited swedish cosmog onist declares canals are surface cracks boston mass april 30 that there exists no intelligent life on planets other than the earth is the opinion of professor svante august arrhenius of sweden called the world's greatest cosmogonist professor arrhenius who is visiting m boston disagrees with the theory of pro fessor perrlval lowell that mars is inhab ited he thinks mars is too cold to support animal life though he says there may exist on it n form of vegetable life the so-called canals on mars he believes are cracks on the surface professor arrhe nius won the nobel prize m 1903 he has been three times president of the uni versity of stockholm and is a director of the nobel institute ex-thief pastor to rich former prisoner occupies pulpit in j p morgan church kkw york april 30 0n august 28 1003 louis j bernhardt after serving a ten-year sentence m the state peniten tiary of tennessee wns released in all he had served ln various prisons twenty two years still youthful m appearance he occupied the pulpit of st george's fashionable episcopal church where j i'ierpont morgan and other wealthy pnrlshioners have pews to-night and told the story of hiÃŸ ufe and his subsequent struggles to get away from crime bern hardt ls manager of criminals mission ln new haven the dlfflcraty about reclaiming crimi nals lies m the condemnation of the con vict by every one bernhardt said weds at grill on dar couple marries m restaurant diners acting as guests portijand ore april 30 romance which some skeptics say ha vanished from tbis humdrum life thru6t itself into the grill of richard's cafe last night and hans von turffs who says he is a german baron and miss elizabeth black burn daughter of a tennessee supreme court judge were married von turffs and miss blnckburn were talking m sub dued tone when suddenly from the former burst i'll dare you right now the young lady blushing hesitated a moment then accepted friends secsred a license and the judge to tie the knot patrons of the grill entered with zest m the pro ceedings collects 600 a minute church pays off 18,000 debt m half an hour the congregation of olivet methodist episcopal church adams street and west forty-second avenne established a record yesterday by raising 18,000 m thirty min utes to defray the indebtedness of the church following a sermon by bishop william a quayle of oklahoma former pastor of st james church Chicago the congregation came forward with con tributions ranging from 1 to 1,000 at the evening service after a sermon by dr shepard 2,500 more was subscribed thereby defraying the total indebtedness of the church then followed a jubilee service three hit by street cars two men and a woman were struck and seriously injured last nlglit by street cars and one of them the woman may die miss anna powers sixty live years old c 625 south seeley avenue was crossing cottage grove avenue at twenty-seventh street when a bouthbound ear struck her her right leg and three ribs were broken and she suffered a severe scalp wound she was rendered unconscious and at the mercy hospital her condition was declared to be critical john sentarinl forty-two years old and joseph ragona both of 11214 bulton ave nue were struck by a Chicago lake shore and south bend car at west one hundred and thirteenth street both were cut about the face and head and sustained internal injuries i man with satchel sought by helm board as national agent of senate outing conspiracy by james fkench doeeance he carried the money that bought votes to elect william lorimer senator h e carried the money that bought elec tions for other u s senators he handled the money for trusts which sought high tariff legislation the helm committee of the Illinois senate is on the trail of the pla.i with the satchel if they get him or his Illinois associates they throw open a wirjo door to the most gigantic corspiracy to manipulate a nations tariif that the interests ever conceived so wide will be the door that the united states senate can hardly miss the opening a reinvestigation of the alleged bribed election of sen ator wiliiani lorimer will be but the first step m the senate housecleaning which must follow although it is outside their direct province the group of state sen ators headed by mr helm have learned that elections were bought for other jnited states senators and that these men delivered the tariff goods when the critical time came this means that the united states senate is likely to have investigations on its hands m other states before the mystery of the tariff is cleared up thus does the man with the satchel assume an importance out of all proportion to his personality and position m life he is the connect ing link between the Illinois chapter m the crime of the tariff and the cen tral pay station m washington which was fed by the interests which hare their headquarters on the eastern seaboard the springfield probers want to get lhe man with the satchel ttm the light that he can throw on possible guilty members of the present gen eral assembly that they may be cast out ln disgrace as unfit to sit with m decent lawmakers they would rather have him or the evidence of his visit than all the ___\ books that packer tilden ever had they would^m rather have the record of his Chicago visit than a detailed list ot all thah lo,ooo reimbursements which edward hines has been charged with so liciting healy and investigator coan on trail that the man with the satchel can probably be trailed back to th fountain head of senate seat buying is incidental to the springfield com mittee whose powers stop with the state boundaries yet the fact cer tainly adds interest to the chase on which special prosecutor john 3 healy and senate investigator m blair coan are believed to be engaged the man with the satchel is not so much a mystery as he ia out of reach of the helm subpoenas with their lirtiited jurisdiction some members of the helm committee if not ail know his name as a last resort lacking the necessary pressure to bring him to springfield his identity and the circumstances of his western trip will be whispered to washington and the country will see whether or not the senate has the nerve to go into a sore of corruption that means much more than the seat of the junior senator from Illinois senator lorimer was elected to the united states senate on may 26 1909 at a cost of some 50,000 according to the most approved trial bal ance that the helm committeemen have been able to strike that 50,000 total is reached in this way ' thirty democratic assemblymen at 1,000 each 30 qoo four democratic senators at 2,500 each jq qqq rewards for republican workers and other manipulators i 000 . total 550,000 it may have been a few thousand dollars more as there is no exact means of knowing just what certain o f the general assembly workers got nothing like 100,000 was actually handed over to the men fl voted at springfield even though that figure may have shown m thc ex pense accounts sent bacjc to washington man with satchel came from washington the man with the satchel came to Chicago from washington within a month after senator lorimer had been elected the satchel hslc a small fortune m big bills which were turned over to one or more local paymasters then the man who carried the satchel returned to washing ton and has taken care not to return to Illinois since the helm committee has reason to believe that the money m the satchel was an apportionment from the national tariff jack pot contrib uted to help out the local interests m the expensive senatorial fight m which they had just triumphed only a few of the general assemblymen who are said to have som out were paid before the election of the united states senator there were sev eral who declared they were ffom missouri and collected m advance the real paying off began june.s and continued until the end of the month the man with the satchel made the bulk of the payments possible according to the theory on which the helm probers are working lthe men with whom this satchel carrier did business m cmÂ«ag ara \ *__-_* . '->__\ examiert grdalf gains : i - the month of april was a record month for the ex aminer for gains since 1909 the figures tell more elo q uently than words the story of the growing popularity of the examiner among the people and the advertisers no other Chicago newspaper even approached the examiner m display advertising gains for the month april 1911 1719.41 columns april 1910 1409.35 columns gain april 1911 310.06 columns the following is the record of advertising m the chi cago morning papers for april 1911 the i iaminer 310.06 columns gain the record-herald 239.09 columns gain the tribune 210.72 columns gain the inter-ocean 49.77 columns gain the daily examiner carries the selling argument of the advertiser into more homes m Chicago than any other morning newspaper the sunday examiner sells more papers than are printed by all the other Chicago sun day papers combined ) \ .

Chicago examiner in every walk of life every vocation everybody looks to the examiner for ms ' wants buyers sellers and trader realize that the want ad pages are the market place of Chicago â– ol ix no l!2 a m * monday Chicago may 1 1911 18 p^ges monday registered in 17 & patent office price one cent Â»Â« b^jts trxtt " - x ' cuira.-n akin imimlvv h n>4 yv^x^'sn chicawo arvd vjcinvty â€” rain and l.'j nuch cc'ftr me.tday with northerly jfefihi Â° o^les tuesday cloudy and ccol r$*lw aaowtst 50 s&^j average 58 bangor me fire unknown martial law declared citixens flee loss 6,000,000 flames wipe out business district leap river and spread to residences dy namite fails to check them homeless refugees are en dangered by falling bridges and swamped ferryboat public buildings burned b-fcngor me april 30 fire starting a broad street near union close by tie junction of the penobscot river and she kenduskeag stream which divides the city rwfept northward fanned by a stiff southerly bree.se wiping out practically all the business district and public build â– lngsl and at a late hour to-night was cat ling up the best residential district on the h northern side ; : i lat midnight the loss was estimated at â– 6,000,000 -; i martial law has been proclaimed by â– mayor mullen buildings m the path of â– the are are being razed by dynamite m â– the hope of checking its progress â– the efforts of the fire department from â– the time the fire started have been ab â– solutcly futile the flames swept north uiong broad then jumped the kenduskeag â– Â„ ream running along on the western bank suloug icxchtinge street si la mes leap across river Â£ i slaying about 4 o'clock ln the afternoon â– , i7u hour the fire had leaped beyond all l ii7i,i ihe smith and strickland blocks â– --' the junction of hammond and central bui reels unci the kenduskeag stream were bdynxuilti.'d late m the afternoon m a vain attempt to keep the sanies from leaping the bstream i i after thp first rush of the fire to tha â– north the back wind set up by the fire itself fanned the flames toward the south â– threatening that part of the city that at first seemed safe b early m the advance of the flames the â– postoffice on a sort of promontory be tween branches of the kenduskeag stream bfeil before the onslaught of the flames 7 i before 5 o'clock the maine central rall â– rc&d was obliged to vacate its depot the â– nrtieating office force and crews seeing th building engulfed almost before they b were out ef danger i at he start sll communication except by â– the postal telegraph company was ent off me western union and the telephone of flcc went early when the city was shut off from tele â– phonic communication hy the burning of â– the central office of the new england â– telephone & telegraph company calls â– tor aid from portland lewiston and au â– gusta were sent out by the wire chief of â– the company who climbed a pole and cut 111 Â« a trunk line â– 3ke slrl operators stuck to the exchange â– until the flames were coming ln their wln â– dows notifying families along the expect i ed route of the fire to drag out all the â– furniture they could and escape i for a long time uie city hall at thc foot of thain street was saved by a slight shift m he wind the haices-chalmers block hthe hodgkins block the fiske building btke i auks &. 00 plant the morse 011 hstr block the offices of the bangor and aroostook railroad the oflice of the ban x get mews the windsor hotel and the pub hafc library were destroyed with many other vu prominent buildings bk'lilitia is on guard hln the residential district the people bsiarled to move ou'i early m the evening i fighting for conveyances on which to t>ile i their eflccts the people were panic i stricken running wildly carrying all i sorts of useless articles snatched up ln â– tbeir frenzy they poured out of the city toward old town t_e escape to brewer across the penob scot was cut off early by the burning of he bridges the ferry was nearly swamped carrying across crowds that waited too long to escape through the â– streets and were cut off by the rapid ad vance of the flames a mon named scrlbner of brewer was immed under the falling walls of the morse oliver building and it is reported that several other persons have perished shortly after 9 o'clock help from neigh boring cities began to arrive and now all j this apparatus is m play the city is m darkness all sources of light having been out off and the greatest confusion prevails the entire population being m the streets already lt is difficult to obtain food many restaurants being liasati together with one large and sev tft small hotels the are is visible for twenty-flve miles around and thousands of people are swarming m from surrounding towns the militip has been called out to aid the po , lice m preserving order m f florence schenck wilson florence schenck to prosecute vanderbilt manager as bigamist penniless woman is 111 in paris from shock of news of wilson's marriage paris april 30 there is a blond lit tle american girl ill and penulliess ln a garret of an obscure hotel m paris who declared to-day to the examiner corres pondent that she is the wife of charles wilson known on two continents as the manager of alfred vanderbilt's show horses a few months ago wilson married a boston heiress at that time the pros pective father-in-law objected to wilson on on the ground of his acquaintance with i certain florence schenck here is the legal record transcribed at somerset house of that acquaintance at the registry office paddington lon don eighth of may 1908 charles henry wilson aged forty-five divorced husband of elizabeth aiuge wilson was married to florence rosser schenck aged twenty-one daughter of dr powhattan schenck sur geon of virginia u 8 a the witnesses were a d procco personal friend of al fred vanderbilt and valeska surratt this afternoon florence schenck said there had been no divorce and that her husband had been ln constant commnnlca tlon with her tip to within a few weeks to what she claims his bigamous marriage ln boston he wrote loving letters promising to return saying that sbe was his only happiness 1 am not divorced from charles wil son she declared he has never even talked of divorce m any of his letters he spoke only of coming back to me he wrote again and again that he could only flnd happiness with me then came this awful thing his so-called marriage to that poor woman he must have been m des perate need of money to run such an aw ful risk of prison â€¢ i shall surely prose cute the shock made me very ill i am alone here and without money and to think he was the man who took me away from home miss schenck or mrs wilson wept over come by physical weakness but persisted m saying i shall go to london as soon as possi ble and swear out a warrant against my husband charging bigamy charles wil son is now ln london managing the coach ing season for alfred vanderhllt a.c wadsworth dies at 78 fathin-ln-law of ex-governor yates prominent in politics springfield lu april so archibald clark wadsworth son of general elijah wndsworth who was on washington's staff and father-in-law of former governor richard tates died to-day at the yates home he was seventy-eight years old and had been a resident of Illinois for seventy years he was prominent m the early polit ical history of the state and for sixteen years was a trustee of the institution for the blind at jacksonville at the time of his death he was president of the board of trustees of the Illinois woman's college the remains will be taken to jacksonville tuesday for burial gibbons against revision commandments must not be changed says cardinal bai/timoiie md april 30.--cardlnnl gibbons to-day expressed his disapproval of the proposal ef episcopalian ministers to shorten the en commandments the cnrdlnal's displeasure was expressed while addressing onfi.__._nts in the im j maculnte conception catholic church to \ day the cardinal said what a horrl-i ble thing to undertake to lay bands on god's commandments we must not dare to change ie iota of od'g word i stock plunger dies dishwasher in cafe old brokers receipts show toiler was michael heitler once a rich grocer wealth lost then nerve â€¢ former friends identify body of man who dropped life less at humble work ten-year old receipts m the pockets of a dishwasher who dropped dead m the lambs cafe saturday night disclosed the fact yesterday that the man was michael heitler formerly a wealthy grocer and produce dealer according to the police his death dis closes another instance where a man who had accumulated wealth tried to buck the market and lost and then lost his nerve nearly a week ago the man applied for a job as dishwasher at the lambs cafe and had been at work only tbree days when be suddeuly toppled over smiley coiibett one of the proprietors of the cafe did not know who be was and none of the employes knew him by any other name than mike he was quiet and reserved and some of the employes bad a lurking feeling tbat he bad known bet ter days his body was removed to the western casket company's establishment and lien tenant edward conroy of central detail assigned detectives sullivan and lennon to investigate in one of his inner pockets lay the mute evidence faded and torn the re ceipts showed that michael heitler had paid large sums of money to brokerage firms and that all he had to show for lt was the receipts ri_en the defectives found some who had known him m his days of prosperity they told the story of how he lost ms money nnd after losing it gradually went down ln the scale of life he ls declared to have two married daughters living ln rogers park and to be related to otber wealthy families m Chicago none of them could be located yesterday ,- bars suffragist smokers mrs belmont angered by report plans garden lunchroom new york april 30 mrs o h p belmont is indignant at a report that she intends to have a smoking room ln her new suffrage quarters mrs ida hosted harper who ls associated with mrs bel mont opposes it Â» what she wants to do ln her new house which by the way is to be the headquarters for the political equality association of which she ls founder is to have a lunch room where delicious luncheons may be served for 25 cents as there are as many men who patronize such lunch rooms as women mrs bel mont's idea is to have lt an out of tfbor or garden lunch where men may smoke if they wish to do so sneezes arm out of joint workman dislocates shoulder when dust gets up his nose a sneeze dislocated the right shoulder of thomas coston 1114 xorth clark street coston works for butler brothers west randolph street and the river and was dusting iv the company's offices some of the dust went up his nostrils and he sneezed he felt a stinging pain and was unable to use his right arm the po lice took him to the practitioners hos pital and later to his home mexican rebels kill u s millionaire servant and two mexicans also slain after insurrectos hold up train hope of peace wanes armistice is signed but fight ing continues foreigners m country m alarm sstclal cabin to the examiner mexico city april 30 pehr olsson seller millionaire former professor m the university of california and the most dls tiguished foreign private resident m mexi co was killed by rebels at 3 o'clock yes terday afternoon near cuernavaca seventy miles from this city three others a mexi can foreman a mexican ranchman and a japanese servant of softer were also killed the rebels flagged a train five miles this side of cuernavaca and robbed the passen gers at the point of rifles the trainmen started back to flag a freight train bearing down from behind but the rebels refused to let them pass softer protested that a wreck would mean a catastrophe with a heavy loss of life and he had no sooner said the words than he was shot down when sorter's japanese servant tried to protect him he was shot also the two mexicans were killed when the rebels fired on the train the engineer of the approaching freight train saw the train ahead just m time to stop and avoid a wreck russian minister protests a widow nnd oue child survive softer he was a native of finland but a swed ish subject russian minister stalowski cabled a strong presentation of the case to soffer's government this evening all communication with the city from the north nnd south of the cuernavaca division has been cut off by the rebels peace seems more remote than ever pres ident dias will not resign according to statements 1 government officials senor carabnjal the peace envoy is still held at saltillo on orders of diaz tho foreigners m the american span ish german und unglieh colonies are pre paring to defend themselves against an other frehch commune the japanese alone show no signs cf alarm the amer ican residents at saltillo have wired their embassy in this city asking permission to organize v military company for their own defense fighting is going on this afternoon in the streets of toricon accordng to dis patches received to-day before telegraphic communication was cut off armistice is signed the armistice was signed this morning by the government and senor figueroa rep resenting tlie rebels m the states of guer rero and morelos margarita neri the girl leader of 000 rebels ln guerrero refuses to abide by the armistice and declares she will fight to the bitter end the war department denies the armis tice was signed to-day but from a source of information absolutely reliable it is known that it was signed before noon to day a petition bearing 1,000 signatures de manding his immediate resignation was presented to-day to president diaz a demonstration hostile to the government has been planned by students to take place here may 15 twenty-two large towns in southern mexico arc iv full control of the rebels thc soo troops sent from this city to the garrison at cuernavaca on friday last have disappeared and a courier reports that they were attacked by the euel&siad the eutlre force either killed or captured 1,000,000 in securities found in hut woman owner sent to asylum miss williams enigma of wall street refuses to collect money due bonda lie on floor nbw tobk april 30 â€” in a dilapidated shanty at 452 prospect avenne brooklyn agents of the state lunacy commission to-day fonnd stocks bonds and mortgages valued at nearly a million dollars scat tered about like so much waste paper the wealth belongs tc miss janes per kins williams the woman enigma of wall street who since 1875 has been a daring but wise speculator in stocks miss williams now m her seventy fifth year has been removed to the long island state hospital for the insane for observa tion friends caused her removal to the institution a special agent of the lunacy commis sion is on guard at the rickety shanty where the woman had lived for twenty years m squalor eirbblsh and old bot tles heaped the floors and she cooked what little food she ate on a score that was almost falling to pieces every day she went to wall street and visited brokers banks and business houses her bankers are henry clews & co in the shanty were found great heaps of letters most of which had never been opened many of these contained evidence of her large investments denies mars is inhabited swedish cosmog onist declares canals are surface cracks boston mass april 30 that there exists no intelligent life on planets other than the earth is the opinion of professor svante august arrhenius of sweden called the world's greatest cosmogonist professor arrhenius who is visiting m boston disagrees with the theory of pro fessor perrlval lowell that mars is inhab ited he thinks mars is too cold to support animal life though he says there may exist on it n form of vegetable life the so-called canals on mars he believes are cracks on the surface professor arrhe nius won the nobel prize m 1903 he has been three times president of the uni versity of stockholm and is a director of the nobel institute ex-thief pastor to rich former prisoner occupies pulpit in j p morgan church kkw york april 30 0n august 28 1003 louis j bernhardt after serving a ten-year sentence m the state peniten tiary of tennessee wns released in all he had served ln various prisons twenty two years still youthful m appearance he occupied the pulpit of st george's fashionable episcopal church where j i'ierpont morgan and other wealthy pnrlshioners have pews to-night and told the story of hiÃŸ ufe and his subsequent struggles to get away from crime bern hardt ls manager of criminals mission ln new haven the dlfflcraty about reclaiming crimi nals lies m the condemnation of the con vict by every one bernhardt said weds at grill on dar couple marries m restaurant diners acting as guests portijand ore april 30 romance which some skeptics say ha vanished from tbis humdrum life thru6t itself into the grill of richard's cafe last night and hans von turffs who says he is a german baron and miss elizabeth black burn daughter of a tennessee supreme court judge were married von turffs and miss blnckburn were talking m sub dued tone when suddenly from the former burst i'll dare you right now the young lady blushing hesitated a moment then accepted friends secsred a license and the judge to tie the knot patrons of the grill entered with zest m the pro ceedings collects 600 a minute church pays off 18,000 debt m half an hour the congregation of olivet methodist episcopal church adams street and west forty-second avenne established a record yesterday by raising 18,000 m thirty min utes to defray the indebtedness of the church following a sermon by bishop william a quayle of oklahoma former pastor of st james church Chicago the congregation came forward with con tributions ranging from 1 to 1,000 at the evening service after a sermon by dr shepard 2,500 more was subscribed thereby defraying the total indebtedness of the church then followed a jubilee service three hit by street cars two men and a woman were struck and seriously injured last nlglit by street cars and one of them the woman may die miss anna powers sixty live years old c 625 south seeley avenue was crossing cottage grove avenue at twenty-seventh street when a bouthbound ear struck her her right leg and three ribs were broken and she suffered a severe scalp wound she was rendered unconscious and at the mercy hospital her condition was declared to be critical john sentarinl forty-two years old and joseph ragona both of 11214 bulton ave nue were struck by a Chicago lake shore and south bend car at west one hundred and thirteenth street both were cut about the face and head and sustained internal injuries i man with satchel sought by helm board as national agent of senate outing conspiracy by james fkench doeeance he carried the money that bought votes to elect william lorimer senator h e carried the money that bought elec tions for other u s senators he handled the money for trusts which sought high tariff legislation the helm committee of the Illinois senate is on the trail of the pla.i with the satchel if they get him or his Illinois associates they throw open a wirjo door to the most gigantic corspiracy to manipulate a nations tariif that the interests ever conceived so wide will be the door that the united states senate can hardly miss the opening a reinvestigation of the alleged bribed election of sen ator wiliiani lorimer will be but the first step m the senate housecleaning which must follow although it is outside their direct province the group of state sen ators headed by mr helm have learned that elections were bought for other jnited states senators and that these men delivered the tariff goods when the critical time came this means that the united states senate is likely to have investigations on its hands m other states before the mystery of the tariff is cleared up thus does the man with the satchel assume an importance out of all proportion to his personality and position m life he is the connect ing link between the Illinois chapter m the crime of the tariff and the cen tral pay station m washington which was fed by the interests which hare their headquarters on the eastern seaboard the springfield probers want to get lhe man with the satchel ttm the light that he can throw on possible guilty members of the present gen eral assembly that they may be cast out ln disgrace as unfit to sit with m decent lawmakers they would rather have him or the evidence of his visit than all the ___\ books that packer tilden ever had they would^m rather have the record of his Chicago visit than a detailed list ot all thah lo,ooo reimbursements which edward hines has been charged with so liciting healy and investigator coan on trail that the man with the satchel can probably be trailed back to th fountain head of senate seat buying is incidental to the springfield com mittee whose powers stop with the state boundaries yet the fact cer tainly adds interest to the chase on which special prosecutor john 3 healy and senate investigator m blair coan are believed to be engaged the man with the satchel is not so much a mystery as he ia out of reach of the helm subpoenas with their lirtiited jurisdiction some members of the helm committee if not ail know his name as a last resort lacking the necessary pressure to bring him to springfield his identity and the circumstances of his western trip will be whispered to washington and the country will see whether or not the senate has the nerve to go into a sore of corruption that means much more than the seat of the junior senator from Illinois senator lorimer was elected to the united states senate on may 26 1909 at a cost of some 50,000 according to the most approved trial bal ance that the helm committeemen have been able to strike that 50,000 total is reached in this way ' thirty democratic assemblymen at 1,000 each 30 qoo four democratic senators at 2,500 each jq qqq rewards for republican workers and other manipulators i 000 . total 550,000 it may have been a few thousand dollars more as there is no exact means of knowing just what certain o f the general assembly workers got nothing like 100,000 was actually handed over to the men fl voted at springfield even though that figure may have shown m thc ex pense accounts sent bacjc to washington man with satchel came from washington the man with the satchel came to Chicago from washington within a month after senator lorimer had been elected the satchel hslc a small fortune m big bills which were turned over to one or more local paymasters then the man who carried the satchel returned to washing ton and has taken care not to return to Illinois since the helm committee has reason to believe that the money m the satchel was an apportionment from the national tariff jack pot contrib uted to help out the local interests m the expensive senatorial fight m which they had just triumphed only a few of the general assemblymen who are said to have som out were paid before the election of the united states senator there were sev eral who declared they were ffom missouri and collected m advance the real paying off began june.s and continued until the end of the month the man with the satchel made the bulk of the payments possible according to the theory on which the helm probers are working lthe men with whom this satchel carrier did business m cmÂ«ag ara \ *__-_* . '->__\ examiert grdalf gains : i - the month of april was a record month for the ex aminer for gains since 1909 the figures tell more elo q uently than words the story of the growing popularity of the examiner among the people and the advertisers no other Chicago newspaper even approached the examiner m display advertising gains for the month april 1911 1719.41 columns april 1910 1409.35 columns gain april 1911 310.06 columns the following is the record of advertising m the chi cago morning papers for april 1911 the i iaminer 310.06 columns gain the record-herald 239.09 columns gain the tribune 210.72 columns gain the inter-ocean 49.77 columns gain the daily examiner carries the selling argument of the advertiser into more homes m Chicago than any other morning newspaper the sunday examiner sells more papers than are printed by all the other Chicago sun day papers combined ) \ .